Stuart Compaan
Stuart Compaan

Reputation: 187

installing composer on a shared host

I am trying to install composer on my shared host for the first time.

When I run curl -sS https://getcomposer.org/installer | php I am getting a Composer successfully installed
User it: php composer.phar

when I run php composer.phar i am getting this warring error:

Warning: Composer should be invoked via the CLI version of PHP, not the cgi-fcgi SAPI

any ideas on how to fix this ? and why i am getting this error ? :(

when I run php -v i get this back

PHP 5.4.39 (cgi-fcgi) (built: Mar 25 2015 14:20:20)  
Copyright (c) 1997-2014 The PHP Group  
Zend Engine v2.4.0, Copyright (c) 1998-2014 Zend Technologies  
    with Zend Guard Loader v3.3, Copyright (c) 1998-2013, by Zend Technologies

Do I need to run this using CLI version if so how would i do this ?

Any help would be nice thank you.

Upvotes: 9

Views: 11157

Answers (4)

Adambean
Adambean

Reputation: 1161

As Composer is now available via WHM you can use this to find it:

which composer

This returned path "/opt/cpanel/composer/bin/composer" for me. If this returns nothing then disregard the rest of this answer, as Composer is not available to you at system level.

You can now use php-cli to call this with Composer's absolute path:

php-cli /opt/cpanel/composer/bin/composer install
php-cli /opt/cpanel/composer/bin/composer update
php-cli /opt/cpanel/composer/bin/composer require whatever/example

You may however need to alias php-cli if your system claims this isn't found. It very much depends how PHP has been deployed on the WHM server. You can do this by adding a user alias to the end of your ".bashrc" file as follows:

alias php-cli=/opt/cpanel/ea-php72/root/usr/bin/php

Replace ea-php72 with the release of PHP you want to use. Submit this as a command in the shell to make it available immediately, otherwise it'll become available when you open your next Bash session.

If you want to make this available with just composer alone you could create this alias again in ".bashrc":

alias composer=/opt/cpanel/ea-php72/root/usr/bin/php /opt/cpanel/composer/bin/composer

Or

php-cli $(which composer) ...

Upvotes: 6

psad
psad

Reputation: 104

I have made a script to handle changes in composer/vendor. The script works with ftp-only servers, sends/removes only the changed files. Maybe someone will find it useful.

https://github.com/psad73/tune-composer

Upvotes: 0

sketchyTech
sketchyTech

Reputation: 5906

The location of the php versions installed will vary from host to host. Try finding them with:

locate /bin/php

For me this lists all php versions and I can then replace php with, for example:

/usr/bin/php71-cli

To access the command line interface version rather than the default cgi one. Then as stated by @Diggery you can create an alias.

alias composer='/usr/bin/php71-cli bin/composer.phar'

There are many suggestions on StackOverflow on how to test for a cli installation but the above is the only one that worked for me.

Upvotes: 0

Diggery
Diggery

Reputation: 101

I resolved this by explicitly calling the version of PHP it asked for. Keep in mind that on a shared server environment there is often multiple versions of PHP running and even though you may have set up your default in your cPanel config, bash commands often resolve to another (lower) version.

First, I created a bin directory and moved composer.phar into it. Then, I added this alias to my .bash_profile and it worked like a charm:

alias composer="/usr/php/54/usr/bin/php-cli ~/bin/composer.phar"

Hope this helps!

Upvotes: 10

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